Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Visting the Guerilla Girls...

A lot of our thoughts-conversations seem to revolve around gender debates and questions of femininity.

Shine recently highlighted that while many aspects of traditional masculinity have been brought into question and radically displaced as societies move toward an overt display of gender parity - remasculinization is becoming a cultural reality within the subcontinent and beyond. One wonders, whether this phenomenon could be linked with the accentuation in social insecurity, mass violence and fundamentalism.

Kriti is attempting to deal with gender issues through her work, especially looking into questions of home and world - exploring social divides that limit opportunities and create boundaries for women in civic participation. She is also hoping to survey the manner in which women personalize their living spaces and interact with one another within more private settings. These questions co-relate with her earlier work based on the incorporation of traditional community-based processes in contemporary, urban constructions.

While discussing Feminism and art activism, the name 'Guerilla Girls' is bound to come up sooner or later. As soon as it did, I realized that I did not know enough about their work as I had only heard/read glossy, over-stated comments/writings on their intervention based practice.

On reading further I found that while gender and racial equality form the core mission of this anonymous activist group, their public actions not only strive to generate visibility for women artists of colour but expand to exposing the discriminatory practices in art institutions across the world. The collective uses social irony, humour and innovative fact-finding to reveal the extent to which artists of colour are overlooked and underrepresented in large museum collections and at times even in Art fairs as well as Biennales. While they may be criticized for their participation in seminars at the very museums they protest against, it is significant that even at these platforms they maintain a critical stance and continue to use inventive diagnostic tactics.

Guerilla Girls on YouTube

Purani Dilli - Through the Lens...




A Walk Through Old Delhi...Quick Re-cap

Since most of the PEERS participants are 'non-delhiites', we were looking forward to a walk through Chandni Chowk with freelance photographer, Abhinandita Mathur. There were few images already lingering in our heads based on earlier descriptions of Purani Dilli and it was valuable to have a one-time resident take us through the congested capillaries of the old city - supplementing visuals with engaging narratives.

After a quick breakfast near the main road at Chandni Chowk we made our way to Nai Sarak, which was filled with dilapidated Havelis and residential complexes converted to cloth and stationary markets.

The lanes became narrower and crowds grew thicker as tea stalls, chatwallahs, flower-sellers, vegetable venders and loaded handcarts battled for inches of space.The constant movement around us was almost dizzying yet exhilarating. The entangled network of wires overhead helped block out the blazing sun. Next came Kinari Bazaar which was flooded with zardosi fabrics, glitter trimmings and wedding accessories. After a short Nimbu Pani break at Chawri Bazaar, we finally ended up at the Jama Masjid.



Sunday, May 17, 2009

Who Cares about Processes...?

We don't have art movements any more. We have market movements. -- Walter Robinson

As emerging art practitioners working in a time when the words 'Boom and Crash' have become inescapably linked with art culture, and a creative impulse is often self-consciously fashioned as a consumable luxury product - there are several challenges for those who wish to take on different paths and voice other concerns - since, the questions Who and How much most often take precedence over What and Why...

Thought maps, artistic processes and basically the steps that lead to the making of an art-work are neither effectively looked into nor valued. Hence, this student residency becomes a useful experiment for each of us to examine the creation process and provide the artists in residence an opportunity to instill a sense of collective participation in their individual practice.


While the commercial face of art shouldn't be critiqued through a unidimensional outlook, as it has certain benefits and delineated purposes in our culturescape, there seems to be a gap between market-driven art and inclusive art practices grounded in social relevance. This could perhaps be best bridged through critical engagement with the changing dynamics of the contemporary arts. Organizations like KHOJ thus, have a crucial role to play at this juncture - stimulating collective action towards developing a more open creative field that allows for problematization and subversion of mainstream narratives. In addition, moving beyond a codified lexicon of 'art activism' to accommodate individual investigation, alternative experimentation and diverse community based practices.

Personally, PEERS is a chance to thoroughly observe the creative process as a lived collaborative journey. During our time together as we become acquainted with one another's visual language and the distillation of ideas occurs through shared conversations, it is hoped that projects will be conceptualized as ongoing processes informed by our socio-cultural environments. For fresh graduates and continuing students from leading art schools - this interaction process enables a stepping away from institutional frameworks where pressure to produce an acceptable 'end-product' can be grueling as didactic Juries often congregate to test the worth of a creative expression.

The residency provides us an opportunity to freely introspect and experiment with new visual vocabularies - as we are no longer bound to quote from established strands of academic debates but rather encouraged to follow fresh thought trails, carry out intense interactions with contemporaries and in turn, re-align the place of the self with a widening worldview.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Introducing Peers 2009


First encounters are usually filled with a mix of excitement and curiosity and at times interspersed with awkwardness and shy silences. As the participants of the student residency - PEERS met at the Khirkee studios, an informal introduction round soon led to marathon conversations. We instantly found common areas of interest and points of debate. As we sat around the courtyard space, ideas and views were tossed about within an ambiance of camaraderie. Hours flew as we spent the day meandering through all sorts of topics from Psychoanalysis to 'high fashion'.

Prateek Sagar began to discuss the ephemeral nature of his conceptual art works, Dorendra Waribam shared his experience with video art and Aliya Pabani chatted about her projects at CEMA (A new media lab at the Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology). Many of the works discussed seemed to incorporate an intense exploration of community groups, inquiry into social patterns and creative expression using diverse technological modes.

A brief conversation with KHOJ members on the studio space, ongoing projects and the current residency helped us familiarize with new terrains. We knew we had landed into a stimulating and FUN space when their instructions included - 'watch out for falling slippers!' and 'We have a hen who wanders about the courtyard...'

As the artists went about choosing studios, we conversed about projection techniques, sonic art, light installations and various aspects of contemporary curatorial practice(s). We began to imagine the exciting possibilities and transformations that could be undertaken in the empty, whitewashed rooms. Shine Shivan began to share some creative ideas he wanted to explore during the residency. He talked about his interest in using material such as bones, feathers, and insects in his art-works. This led to a plunge into the widening discourse on extreme art. Aliya talked about the politics behind the display of human beings and specifically 'Bodies...the exhibition' in which human remains were showcased. Speculations on the origins of these bodies continues as they were allegedly linked to the secret trade in Chinese bodies.

At that point I remembered visiting the preview show of Damien Hirst's 'Beautiful Inside My Head Forever' in Delhi. As I stood before a glossy butterfly work, I had overheard a young visitor nonchalantly quiz a Sotheby's employee , 'So, he actually kills to make his art?' The reaction was a stiff smile and an impressive justification. But the larger question remains unanswered 'Is killing for art truly justifiable?'